Prospectus Matchups

Life After 30

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Here's good news for subscribers to Major League Baseball's Extra Innings package: The downtime music has finally been changed! The porno-style whacka-whacka guitars--the same 32 bars or so of which has been playing before and after games since at least 2002--has been replaced by something as funky as it wanna be. While it sounds like incidental music that wouldn't have made it onto this album, any change is welcome. Gone too is the picture of Doug Mientkiewicz in his Twins uniform. I don't want to say it was old, but that was three teams ago for Doug. The music and tomorrow's gamecast schedule popped on as soon as last night's Angels-Indians contest ended, providing the soundtrack while we tried to comprehend just how bad the Angels baserunning was in this game. They ran as though gassed, but still managed a big win thanks in no small part to the largesse of Jake Westbrook.

The Angels have the least-productive first baseman in baseball. The Rays, with Travis Lee getting the lion's share of the playing time there and doing his usual thing, are arguably just as bad. After those two teams, nobody else is close. The difference between the Rays and the Angels is that the latter has a good shot at winning the division. It would be weird for them to fall short in part because they got nothing out of a traditionally-offensecentric position, especially in a season where Darin Erstad has missed so much time with an injury. Things haven't been any better across the diamond, either. It's a toss-up between which two of these opponents has gotten the least out of their third baseman. Aaron Boone makes a strong case for Cleveland. The Angels lost 15 games to the Edgardo Alfonzo experienceni which has skewed things a bit. Again, though, getting so little out of the corners is killing them.

Two of the more active relievers of the last several seasons appeared in last night's game. Scot Shields (Angels) and Guillermo Mota (Indians) are two of the only four pitchers to crack triple figures in relief innings in a single season since 2000. The top 10:

Mota's 2004 season is just south of this list as well. For his part, Shields cracked 90 innings last year and could well do so again this year. In all, 31 pitchers threw 90 or more innings of relief between 2000 and 2005. The Pirates Salomon Torres could break the 100-inning mark this year with continued heavy usage, as could Gary Majewski (now of the Reds) and the Yankees' Scott Proctor. Majewski's former teammate Jon Rauch could get there as well. The Mets could see two pitchers throw 90 innings or more of relief this year in the persons of Darren Oliver and Aaron Heilman. The last team to get that much work out of two relievers was the 2000 Reds with Sullivan and Danny Graves.

The Tigers have put themselves in an excellent position to do something no other team has done before: win 100 games coming off at least a decade of being below .500. Their .674 winning percentage--if it held--would give them 109 wins on the season. Even accounting for some slack, they still stand a great chance of ending up at the top of this list. These are the teams that endured at least 10 consecutive losing seasons in their history. Most barely crawled to .500 in their first season out of the soup. The most famous club on the list--and the one the Tigers are a good bet to best--are the Miracle Braves of 1914:

It will be interesting to see how the majors' leading home run team fares against the pitching staff that has surrendered the fewest homers at home so far in 2006.

The White Sox and Tigers are one-three in home runs in the American League. On the other side of the ball, the Tigers have allowed the second-fewest homers in the league, 87--or a little less than one per game. Stingy though they have been in other games, in their previous six meetings with the White Sox, the Tigers pitchers were not able to excise the long ball from the Chicago arsenal. The Sox treated Detroit like they have everyone else in that regard: with little remorse.

I've been working my way through the first season of Deadwood on DVD. Always on the alert for a baseball reference, I was thrilled to hear one. Barkeep Dan Dority (played by W. Earl Brown) opines that it would make him happier if the Deadwood newspaper carried some baseball news, especially about the new league that's put a team in Chicago. This was, of course, the White Stockings, now the Cubs, in the brand new National League of 1876. I always love it when characters talk about baseball in movies. I remember once seeing a television movie about the Kennedys. The opening title read: Boston, October 1946. Nobody mentioned the Red Sox either being in or having just been in the World Series. That infuriated me. Boston. October 1946. What else mattered then and there? Anyway, the Deadwood reference was cool. One of the things that I love about this game is its continuity. That the very same franchise that is hosting the Astros tonight was on the tip of the tongues of men in places like Deadwood 125 years ago will always fascinate.

Starting the bottom of the seventh last night, Luke Hudson was cruising. The Red Sox, having just dropped three of four to the A's in convincing fashion, were down 4-0. The standings at the base of the Green Monster showed the Yankees had crept to within a half-game. Less than an hour later, it was over. The Red Sox had gotten up off the mat and beaten the Royals. This was the turning point of their 2006 season--the moment at which they turned back the Yankee charge and went on to win the division.

Sorry, I had heard Rick Sutcliffe say earlier in the evening that the Cardinals felt their season had turned around when they rallied to tie the Astros in the ninth on July 8th and I was caught up in the whole cause and effect thing. The Cardinals winning streak had actually begun the game before that. Also, for teams that managed a late comeback win, what do you think the won-loss record in the next 10 games would be? Do you think it's better, worse or the same than the 10 games previous to the comeback game?

Looking at Matt Stairs' career, I was wondering if a player ever lasted so long, moved around so much and produced so little in value in exchange for his services. I don't mean that he hasn't been a productive player. It's just that in all the times he's moved between teams, only one other player has ever gone in the other direction. Most of his moves have come via free agency with one--the Red Sox buying him from the Expos--via outright purchase. The only time a player was involved in his movement came in 2000 when the A's sent him to the Cubs for Eric Ireland, a very busy minor league pitcher who topped out at Triple A in 2001 and was done as a professional two years later.

Stairs is a part of baseball's Life After 30 Club, those players who had to wait until at least their 30th birthday to qualify for their first batting title. Here are the active members, courtesy of Keith Woolner: